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On to Victory

Page 47

by Mark Zuehlke


  IT IS OVERWHELMINGLY the sacrifice of Canadian soldiers that remains imprinted on the national consciousness. During an April to May research trip for this book, I see repeated examples of how the Dutch continue to honour Canadians both as a community and personally. One day in Amsterdam I speak with a Dutch publisher, who recalls cycling as a teenager past what turned out to be a Canadian Commonwealth Cemetery. Turning in, she walked along the seemingly endless rows of headstones and read the names, ages, and birthplaces of all these young men. The realization that in giving their lives they had made it possible for her to enjoy freedom moved her to tears.

  Bernard Diepman, the youth whose farm was used by the Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders for an overnight stop during the fighting near Dalfsen, stands with me in front of Salvo Bridge and describes two days when the war swirled around his family. That was almost a lifetime ago, but he has carefully nurtured those memories and returned to the farms here many times to walk the ground and consider the way the small action—not really a battle—unfolded. Along with many others, Bernard immigrated to Canada. After the war, during the 1950s and early 1960s, the Dutch government actively encouraged its youth to leave in order to alleviate the nation’s continuing poverty by reducing its population. But he returns to Holland regularly and is always drawn back to this place and the memories of that time.

  Not far away, on the southern outskirts of Zwolle, the few farms that made up Leesten have been replaced by a new, ultramodern subdivision still under construction. There are rows of tightly packed houses on streets where lawns have yet to be planted, and the back yards face streets still awaiting the arrival of builders. Most of the residents are young couples with small children. Few grew up anywhere near Leesten or have any knowledge of the day when 9th Canadian Infantry Brigade fought a stiff, small battle that left the farms ruined, the old windmill destroyed, and some Canadian dead. Yet at the suggestion of a resident who was born in the area, the people of this new community decided that each street would bear the name of one of the regiments that fought here or of a man who fell. “There was no disagreement,” a fellow standing on his doorstep explains. “It was the right thing to do.”

  There are other Dutch towns, such as Woensdrecht, that have more Canadian-themed street names than Leesten has, but I am struck by the fact that this initiative is coming from young people today. In Canada, people of this age, facing the responsibility of recent parenthood, are among those least likely to give much thought to remembering our nation’s role in World War II and of their countrymen who fell.

  Monuments commemorating Canada’s role in liberating specific communities in the Netherlands are common coin. Some are modest, often a restored Sherman tank or other army relic. Many others are statues adorned with regimental crests of units that fought in the vicinity. As part of its 50th Anniversary celebration of the war’s end, Groningen created Liberation Forest just outside the city. Here, thirteen thousand maple trees were initially planted. Since its inception in 1995, the number of trees has grown to about thirty thousand and more are planted during ceremonies each year. Most of the trees were purchased by local residents. They border a long path that winds through the countryside. At one end, a large stylized metal maple leaf stands in a pond. Before it is a monument that bears the crests of all the regiments involved in the city’s liberation. The entire site is tidy and well maintained. A man out walking his dog tells me that each year some of the trees die during the winter, but that they are planting more than enough to replace them, and that thousands of people come from the city to attend ceremonies held here. The path through the trees is also a popular walking and cycling route.

  A poem written by a local resident, John Plëst, to mark the forest’s creation in 1995, is also on display. It describes the fierce battle in Groningen’s streets, and closes: “Thanks to the Canadians, a tough job done/ to commemorate them we dedicate a forest yet/ Maple leaves fell for us, lest we forget.”

  Of course the Dutch don’t forget. I visit Holten Canadian War Cemetery where 1,355 Canadians soldiers lay at rest. Lieutenant General Guy Simonds personally selected the location because the surrounding forest reminded him of Ontario. It is a warm spring day, just two days after the Remembrance Day ceremonies. Before each headstone, a single yellow daffodil has been set on the ground and methodically centred. My friend Johan van Doorn explains that each flower was laid by a schoolchild who had researched the name of the soldier to learn about him and give this simple act of remembrance more personal resonance. This is done every year.

  Looking out across the wide expanse of headstones, I am reminded that their number could easily have been three to four times as many had it not been for the secret negotiations that yielded a ceasefire at the Grebbe Line, averting a pitched battle to liberate the great cities of western Holland. There is no doubt that the Germans in Fortress Holland would have otherwise made good on the threat to inundate the region. Many thousands, perhaps millions, of Dutch would have drowned or succumbed to starvation and disease. Canadian casualties resulting from an attempt to win the cities and surrounding flooded countryside would have far exceeded the number suffered during the rest of the campaign in Holland and western Germany. The success of those negotiations proves that sometimes the pen truly is mightier than the sword.

  As I walk down one long row of headstones after another, pausing before each to note the name, age, unit of service, hometown, and often touching sentiment added by family, the story of a country at war is revealed. Some of these soldiers were terribly young, others were already husbands and fathers. They came from the cities and small towns of a nation just beginning a transformation from agrarianism to industrialization—a transition completed while they were away and at war. Those that survived returned to a country forever changed by the conflict. And they brought to Canada even greater change. Most buried the painful memories of the war deep within themselves and turned to building better lives for their families. They had gone overseas while the nation was still being rocked by the Great Depression. In the army, they had learned to take care of each other, for therein lay the only path that might ensure survival. At home, they helped create a country where programs existed to provide basic security for all. They had, after all, fought not just for the freedom of subjugated peoples to live a decent life, but equally for every Canadian.

  APPENDIX A:

  PRINCIPAL POLITICIANS, COMMANDERS, AND UNITS IN THE LIBERATION CAMPAIGN

  (ONLY THOSE MENTIONED IN TEXT)

  AMERICAN

  President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt

  Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), Gen.

  Dwight G. Eisenhower

  SHAEF Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith

  Twelfth U.S. Army Group, Gen. Omar Bradley

  Third Army, Gen. George S. Patton

  Ninth Army, Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson

  BRITISH

  Prime Minister, Winston Churchill

  Chief of Imperial General Staff, Gen. Sir Alexander Brooke

  Twenty-First Army Group, Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery

  Twenty-First Army Group Chief of Staff, Maj. Gen. Francis “Freddie”

  de Guingand

  Second Army, Gen. Miles Dempsey

  XXX Corps, Gen. Brian Horrocks

  51st Highland Division, Maj. Gen. Thomas Rennie (KIA Mar. 24,

  1945)

  Netherlands District, Maj. Gen. Sandy Galloway

  CANADIAN

  Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King

  First Army, Gen. Harry Crerar

  First Army Chief of Staff, Brig. C.C. “Church” Mann

  I Corps, Lt. Gen. Charles Foulkes

  II Corps, Lt. Gen. Guy Simonds

  II Corps, Commander Corps Royal Artillery, Brig. Stanley Todd

  1st Division, Maj. Gen. Harry Foster

  2nd Division, Maj. Gen. Bruce Matthews

  3rd Division, Maj. Gen. R.H. “Holly” Keefler

&n
bsp; 4th Division, Maj. Gen. Chris Vokes

  5th Division, Maj. Gen. Bert Hoffmeister

  1st Armoured Brigade, Brig. Bill Murphy

  2nd Brigade, Brig. Pat Bogert

  4th Armoured Brigade, Brig. Robert Moncel

  4th Brigade, Brig. Fred Cabeldu

  5th Armoured Brigade, Brig. Ian Cumberland

  5th Brigade, Brig. W.J. “Bill” Megill

  6th Brigade, Brig. Jean Allard

  7th Brigade, Brig. Graeme Gibson

  8th Brigade, Brig. J.A. “Jim” Roberts

  9th Brigade, Brig. J.M. “Rocky” Rockingham

  10th Brigade, Brig. Jim Jefferson

  11th Brigade, Brig. Ian Johnston

  DUTCH

  Government-in-Exile:

  Head of State, Queen Wilhelmina

  Prime Minister, Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy

  Commander, Dutch Armed Forces, Prince Bernhard

  Member of the College van Vertrouwensmannen (committee within

  the Netherlands representing Dutch government-in-exile), Jacob van

  der Gaag (aka Richard)

  Occupation Government:

  Director of Food, Dr. S.L. Louwes

  Secretary-General of the Departments of Agriculture and Fisheries,

  and Commerce, Industry and Shipping, Dr. H.M. “Max” Hirschfeld

  Resistance:

  Commander of the Nederlandse Binnenlandse Strijdkrachten (NBS )

  (Dutch Forces of the Interior), Col. Henri Koot

  GERMAN

  Netherlands Governor, Reichkommissar Arthur Seyss-Inquart

  Netherlands Höherer SS und Polizeiführer Hans Albin Rauter

  Commander-in-Chief West, Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring

  Supreme Commander, Wehrmacht in the Netherlands, Gen. der

  Flieger Friedrich Christiansen to Apr. 7, then Generaloberst

  Johannes Blaskowitz

  Army Group H, Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz to Apr. 7

  Twenty-Fifth Army, Christiansen to Apr. 7, then Blaskowitz

  Twenty-Fifth Army Chief of Staff, Generalleutnant Paul Reichelt

  First Fallschirmjäger Army, Gen. der Fallschirmtruppen Alfred

  Schlemm until Mar. 28, then Gen. der Infanterie Günther

  Blumentritt

  II Fallschirmjäger Corps, Gen. der Flieger Eugen Meindl

  LXXXVI Corps, Gen. der Infanterie Erich von Straube

  XLVII Panzer Corps, Gen. der Panzertruppen Heinrich Freiherr von

  Lüttwitz

  6th Fallschirmjäger Division, Generalleutnant Hermann Plocher

  APPENDIX B:

  THE CANADIAN ARMY IN THE LIBERATION CAMPAIGN

  (COMBAT UNITS ONLY)

  FIRST CANADIAN ARMY TROOPS

  Royal Montreal Regiment

  1st Armoured Personnel Carrier Regiment

  1st Army Group, Royal Canadian Artillery:

  11th Field Regiment

  1st Medium Regiment

  2nd Medium Regiment

  5th Medium Regiment

  2nd Army Group, Royal Canadian Artillery:

  19th Field Regiment

  3rd Medium Regiment

  4th Medium Regiment

  7th Medium Regiment

  2nd Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment (Mobile)

  Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:

  10th Field Park Company

  5th Field Company

  20th Field Company

  23rd Field Company

  I CANADIAN CORPS TROOPS

  1st Armoured Car Regiment (Royal Canadian Dragoons)

  7th Anti-Tank Regiment

  1st Survey Regiment

  1st Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment

  (Lanark and Renfrew Scottish Regiment)

  Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:

  9th Field Park Company

  12th Field Company

  13th Field Company

  14th Field Company

  II CANADIAN CORPS TROOPS

  18th Armoured Car Regiment (12th Manitoba Dragoons)

  6th Anti-Tank Regiment

  2nd Survey Regiment

  6th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment

  Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:

  8th Field Park Company

  29th Field Company

  30th Field Company

  31st Field Company

  1ST CANADIAN INFANTRY DIVISION

  4th Reconnaissance Regiment (Princess Louise Dragoon Guards)

  Saskatoon Light Infantry (MG)

  The Royal Canadian Artillery:

  1st Field Regiment (Royal Canadian Horse Artillery)

  2nd Field Regiment

  3rd Field Regiment

  1st Anti-Tank Regiment

  2nd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment

  Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:

  1st Field Company

  3rd Field Company

  4th Field Company

  2nd Field Park Company

  1st Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Royal Canadian Regiment (Permanent Force)

  Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment

  48th Highlanders of Canada Regiment

  2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry Regiment

  (Permanent Force)

  Seaforth Highlanders of Canada Regiment

  Loyal Edmonton Regiment

  3rd Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Royal 22e Regiment (Permanent Force)

  Carleton and York Regiment

  West Nova Scotia Regiment

  2ND CANADIAN INFANTRY DIVISION

  8th Reconnaissance Regiment (14th Canadian Hussars)

  Toronto Scottish Regiment (MG)

  The Royal Canadian Artillery:

  4th Field Regiment

  5th Field Regiment

  6th Field Regiment

  2nd Anti-Tank Regiment

  3rd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment

  Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:

  1st Field Park Company

  2nd Field Company

  7th Field Company

  11th Field Company

  4th Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Royal Regiment of Canada

  Royal Hamilton Light Infantry

  Essex Scottish Regiment

  5th Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada

  Le Régiment de Maisonneuve

  Calgary Highlanders

  6th Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal

  Queen’s Own Cameron Highlanders

  South Saskatchewan Regiment

  3RD CANADIAN INFANTRY DIVISION

  7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Duke Of York’s

  Royal Canadian Hussars)

  Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa (MG Battalion)

  The Royal Canadian Artillery:

  12th Field Regiment

  13th Field Regiment

  14th Field Regiment

  3rd Anti-Tank Regiment

  4th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment

  Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:

  3rd Field Park Company

  6th Field Company

  16th Field Company

  18th Field Company

  7th Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Royal Winnipeg Rifles

  Regina Rifle Regiment

  1st Battalion, Canadian Scottish Regiment

  8th Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

  Le Régiment de la Chaudière

  North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment

  9th Canadian Infantry Brigade:

  Highland Light Infantry of Canada

  Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders

  North Nova Scotia Highlanders

  4TH CANADIAN ARMOURED DIVISION

  29th Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment

  (South Alberta Regiment)

  10th Canadian Independent MG Company

  (New Brunswick Rangers
)

  Lake Superior Regiment (Motor)

  Royal Canadian Artillery:

  15th Field Regiment

  23rd Field Regiment (Self-Propelled)

  5th Anti-Tank Regiment

  4th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment

  Royal Canadian Corps of Engineers:

  6th Field Park Squadron

  8th Field Squadron

  9th Field Squadron

  4th Canadian Armoured Brigade:

  21st Armoured Regiment (Governor General’s Foot Guards)

  22nd Armoured Regiment (Canadian Grenadier Guards)

  23rd Armoured Regiment (British Columbia Regiment)

  10th Canadian Armoured Brigade:

  Lincoln and Welland Regiment

  Algonquin Regiment

  Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada

  5TH CANADIAN ARMOURED DIVISION

  3rd Canadian Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment

  (Governor General’s Horse Guards)

  11th Independent Machine Gun Company

  (Princess Louise Fusiliers)

  Westminster Regiment (Motor)

  The Royal Canadian Artillery:

  17th Field Regiment

  8th Field Regiment (Self-Propelled)

  4th Anti-Tank Regiment

  5th Light Anti-Tank Regiment

 

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